Hmmm... and the iPod Touch too... now if the iPhone/Touch just had Flash enabled in Safari we could build a Flash UI ;-)

Actually, since a Flash UI would unify the Orbiter and Adminsite code into one program, that would be excellent. But since the ease of HTML and the common skills of C/C++ would be lost, the Flash GUI would really demand an interface builder app, rather than the proprietary Adobe tools. There's OpenLaszlo...

I installed tversity on my vista pc when they announced an interface for the iphone several months ago (before I even knew about LMCE). You dont install anything but you go to http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:41952/iphone when you are connected to your wlan, and it isnt bad. You have to wait forever for tversity to transcode your video before it plays, but it works nicely (fast) for pictures and music. I port forward so i can get to all my music/pictures on the road too, using edge, since i dont like having everything on my phone.

I know you posted for using the iphone as an orbiter/remote but this would be a cool thing too. I just wish I knew how to do the 'ajaxy' stuff and make the interface myself.

as i said before, it works. you just make a Size definition for the iphone.

Well, I was looking for a realworld review from someone evidently about to try it. I'm impressed by the Web Orbiter (that it mirrors the real Orbiter, its proxy architecture, that it's responsive), so I was looking to see how well it performs on an iPhone to meet their use case they started this thread about.

as i said before, it works. you just make a Size definition for the iphone.

Well, I was looking for a realworld review from someone evidently about to try it. I'm impressed by the Web Orbiter (that it mirrors the real Orbiter, its proxy architecture, that it's responsive), so I was looking to see how well it performs on an iPhone to meet their use case they started this thread about.

The Web Orbiter is a bit of a hack that has been around since the early Pluto days. Basically the UI1 screen is rendered as a complete clickable map and the whole screen is re-rendered every time you interact with the UI. It needs a fast and low latency connection. Having said that it does work on pretty much any web enabled device (I have not found anything it wont work on so far) so it is useful from that perspective.

as i said before, it works. you just make a Size definition for the iphone.

Well, I was looking for a realworld review from someone evidently about to try it. I'm impressed by the Web Orbiter (that it mirrors the real Orbiter, its proxy architecture, that it's responsive), so I was looking to see how well it performs on an iPhone to meet their use case they started this thread about.

The Web Orbiter is a bit of a hack that has been around since the early Pluto days. Basically the UI1 screen is rendered as a complete clickable map and the whole screen is re-rendered every time you interact with the UI. It needs a fast and low latency connection. Having said that it does work on pretty much any web enabled device (I have not found anything it wont work on so far) so it is useful from that perspective.

Is it literally regenerated from the UI1, so whenever developers change UI1 the Web Orbiter interface automatically "just works"? So there's no chance of diverging the Web Orbiter GUI from the UI1 GUI? If so, that's really excellent.

All I could think to improve it would be to turn it to AJAX, so only the GUI areas that actually change reload - not the whole page, with the HTTP Expires, If-Modified-Since and other caching headers skipping refreshes entirely on those section. If the Web GUI were split into widgets, instead of whole screen, with interactive widgets including all their visual states (eg. buttons offer both default and "pressed" looking images), and some javascript for immediate feedback for interaction (ie. click a button and it immediately appears depressed, while the browser sends the click to the server, then returns the message to the clicked button itself, whose Javascript decides whether to refresh just the button, or the whole page). But as "quick & dirty", the current functionality is perfectly adequate.

And for mobiles that support Bluetooth PAN, Web Orbiter puts an orbiter on any mobile.